When I was starting businesses when I was in my 20s, I expected results quickly. I expected to work hard on something for a year and I would see super results.
But it depends on your business. Is it a new idea? Do you need to educate customers still or are they familiar with your type of products or services? If yes, you need time. If no, you need to negotiate better distribution terms and acquisition costs from your suppliers to compete with your more established competition, etc

If you're planning to do this as a serious business, then I would advise against trying to do it yourself. Many people who try to do it themselves end up with websites that like a "do-it-yourself" website. Web design and Web development can get very involved if you want to achieve a professional look as well as function properly. Many potential customers and visitors, having used many websites, base their feelings of a business' credibility on your website.

You're asking how to monetise a website. The answer depends on what your website is and a few more factors.
In general however, you can monetise a website by either: sell a product or service, create a membership site where people pay to be a member and the other major way is to attract advertisers to advertise with you.
If you don't have advertisers, Google and Yahoo offer to share their advertisers with you for a share of the profits.
Contact me if you need assistance to set these up.

I'm not sure if you're asking because you've tried and it failed or whether you're asking to see if it's a good idea.
If it's the latter, then it might be a good idea and it might work. But the question in business is who will continue to pay for these meals? Will it be the patients, will it be the relatives or will it be the taxpayer, or another group? Then once that's answered, the next question would be: is there enough incentive there to continue paying for it?

To be an economic powerhouse, you need to set up a lot of things as a nation to ensure that you are trustworthy and assure investors that you have institutions and laws that ensure fairness and legal protection and respect for their property.

My answer on the 29th of August 2015:
If you are serious about blogging, do it on Wordpress. I would recommend it running on your own domain name and on a hosting account you control.
Reasons: you can customise its features, you have control over it, you're investing in your URL for the long term.
My answer today, 13th March 2016:

Generally, I disagree with bail outs because it works against benefits of having a free market and free competition. We got to where we are because people who were in positions of power and influence allowed or made the conditions which caused these calamities, to remain in power and influence. They might have done so intentionally with honest motives or for private gain, or unintentionally through incompetence or stupidity.

In short, "No, you don't need to be a specialist to start a business". But you have to be competent or you have something to offer to your customers, partners, employers or investors that would make them want to do business with you.

There are observations I've made that may help you:
1. As important as Content Marketing is, many small business owners prioritize expenses that can bring them income directly as a result, like Pay Per Click. Content Marketing is not one of those. The idea of SEO, let alone Content Marketing requires time and effort to convey small business owners.

The first stop really is to go through the employment contract you signed with your previous employer. Is there a clause there pertaining to the type of work you can or cannot do after working with them?
The concept normally is that employers own the result of your work. Plus they would not like it if you start competing with them. Or if you start making money and they want a cut of your profits.

I'll address the technical aspect of your project because I'm guessing you have worked out the business and operational aspects of your website.
If you want to have different types and levels of users, writers and contributors with varying access, restrictions and permissions, then Drupal is a good CMS to use for an online magazine website. It also has great tagging and categorising infrastructure.

You can create a blog purely on HTML (and CSS) with a program like Dreamweaver. However, having assisted individuals and businesses set up their blogs, I would highly advise against doing a blog purely on HTML. You will spend your time putting it together, only to realize very quickly, that it is not a good solution and you need to rebuild it differently. With a HTML blog, as you grow, your work rises exponentially!

I would recommend you to start visualizing what this website would look like. I am not referring so much to how it would look but rather, the processes of how you want things done. Obviously, the more details you can put on paper, the better. If you have a business plan, the information relevant would be where you outline the technical process by which you are going to make money.

I would say that's an effective way to distribute products. If I were you however, I would just make sure that the terms of the contract are negotiable ever so often to avoid locking yourself and /or your business in a contract that will later make it difficult for you to change things around.

Capitalism needs consumer to buy goods and services. At the same time all companies are trying to reduce labor. Will there not be enough work for all?
Farming today needs vastly less people than 100 years ago. Industrial production in most companies can produce vastly more with the same number of staff than 20 years ago. Even service jobs are being replaced, think automated check-out counters or nursing robots.
Will we run out of work? And if yes, what will be the consequences?

Do you need to register as a company? Can you NOT register as a Sole Trader in India? That's probably the simplest to start with. I would only start using a company when it is worth more than its trouble.
Once you have that, I would, if I were in your shoes, see if I can legally protect any intellectual property I can have on the product (trademarks, patent, copyright, etc).